Winner of the Boston Marathon, legendary Canadian runner Jerome Drayton dies at 80
Drayton died unexpectedly on Monday in Toronto, according to Cardinal Funeral Homes. Runners World magazine said he died during knee surgery.
Drayton was inducted into Canada's Sports Hall of Fame in 1978.
Born as Peter Buniak on Jan. 10, 1945, in Kolbermoore, Germany, he came to Canada in 1956 and changed his name.
He turned heads in 1969 by winning the Motor City Marathon in a North American record time. Later that year, he won the Fukuoka Marathon in Japan with another North American record.
Over his career, Drayton held 12 national titles and set 13 records over various distances, according to the hall of fame.
In 1970, he recorded a world record on the track in the men's 10-mile with a time of 46:37:6.
Drayton set the Canadian marathon record of 2:10:09 in Fukuoka in December 1975 and finished sixth in the Olympic marathon the following year in Montreal. Drayton's Canadian marathon mark lasted until 2018 when Cam Levins bettered it in the Toronto Waterfront Marathon.
In 1977, Drayton was the first Canadian in 29 years to win the Boston Marathon. He won a silver medal at the Commonwealth Games the next year.
After retiring, Drayton remained involved in the athletic world as a consultant with the Sports and Fitness Division of Ontario's Ministry of Youth, Culture and Recreation.
---
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Feb. 12, 2025
The Canadian Press
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Who is Victoria Mboko? The surging Canadian youngster who won her first WTA title
An 18-year-old tennis prodigy storming through a WTA event, knocking out ranked players and winning the title for the first time in their career. No, we're not talking about Emma Raducanu's run to the US Open final in 2021, but instead Victoria Mboko's eerily similar surge to the final of the Canadian Open in Montreal. Yet, where Raducanu's charge from qualifier to title winner came out of the blue, Mboko's run feels more like the culmination of a superb season. The teenager began 2025 ranked outside the top 300 players on the women's tour, but a breakthrough year saw her win 22 successive matches in January and February to clinch four ITF singles titles. By early May, her win-loss record for the season was 33–3. Her success sent her inside the top 200 in the rankings and earned her a wildcard entry into a first WTA 1000 main draw at the Miami Open where she defeated Camila Osorio in the first round. Mboko then qualified for the Italian Open and was beaten by Coco Gauff in the second round despite taking the opening set off the American. Two grand slam appearances followed, the first at the French Open, where Mboko fought through qualifying and made it to the third round, and the second at Wimbledon, where she lost to Hailey Baptiste. But the best was yet to come. Mboko was born in Charlotte, North Carolina, but was raised in Toronto and is a Canadian citizen. The National Bank Open is her 'home' tournament, and a straight-sets win over Kimberly Birrell in the opening round kickstarted her remarkable run. That victory shot her to a career-best No 85 in the world rankings, but her run through the tournament in Montreal is set to propel her inside the top 50. On her way to the semi-finals, she dropped just one set, against the Czech Republic's Marie Bouzkova, having seen off experienced threats such as Sofia Kenin and Gauff in a rematch of their Italian Open meeting. Mboko was the superior player this time around and swept the No 1 seed aside 6-1, 6-4 in the round of 16. Onlookers may have thought her remarkable tournament would end in the last four, as she was drawn against 2022 Wimbledon champion Elena Rybakina, but Mboko revealed how strong her mental game is alongside an impressive physical performance. Rybakina stormed through the first set, winning it 6-1, and had a match point in the second, which Mboko managed to save. After that, she dug deep to take the set before clinching a deciding set tie break in front of adoring home supporters to become the first Canadian to beat three former grand slam champions in a single WTA event in the Open era. 'I had everyone supporting me and pushing me through. Without you guys, I don't think I would've been able to pull this through,' she said after defeating Rybakina. Mboko was just the third wildcard to reach the final at the Canadian Open in the Open era, after Monica Seles in 1995 and Simona Halep in 2015. She faced Naomi Osaka for the chance to win a first WTA title, the four-time grand slam champion having booked her place in a WTA final for the first time since Miami in 2022. Osaka, the first Japanese player to reach the final at the Canadian Open and had something to prove after a lean period in her own career. Yet, Mboko's fairytale run could not be denied as the teenager came from a set down to clinch a 2-6, 6-4, 6-1 victory and become only the third Canadian to win their home event. Winning the title in Montreal is the crowning achievement of Mboko's incredible year, but it is only the start of what could be a fascinating career for the Canadian teenager. This triumph will be just a stepping stone for Mboko, who has a bright future ahead of her.
Yahoo
16 hours ago
- Yahoo
Akie Iwai, trying to join twin as LPGA winner this season, leads in Portland
PORTLAND, Ore. — Akie Iwai of Japan eagled the fifth hole and birdied the other three par 5s at Columbia Edgewater, shooting an 8-under 64 on Saturday to take a two-stroke lead in The Standard Portland Classic. Iwai is trying to join twin sister Chisato as an LPGA Tour winner this year after second-place finishes in Thailand in February and Los Angeles in April. She put on a ball-striking exhibition Saturday in mostly calm conditions on the tree-lined course, hitting a 5-wood 200 yards to 3 feet to set up the eagle and twice hitting to a foot for birdie - the last on the par-4 18th to get to 18-under 198. 'My style, my golf style, is aggressive,' she said. 'That's why no change this week. Also, aim to the pin - boom! boom! Every shot, every hole. That's it.' Grace Kim of Australia was second after a 67. She holed a 156-yard, 7-iron shot for eagle from the left rough on the par-4 17th. 'I was trying to see if I could get a drop,' Kim said. 'I wasn't entirely over the sprinkler-head boxes so you knew I just had to hit it. Leaked right again. I was like, `Oh, please get through the rough.' Somehow went in the hole." Linn Grant was 14 under after a 65. The Swede won the 2023 Dana Open for her lone LPGA Tour title. 'Tried to go out and just be, I wouldn't say happy, but just accepting of whatever today would bring,' Grant said. 'I think I played very mature and just had a lot of fun.' Gurleen Kaur had a 70 to get to 13 under, and Aditi Ashok (65) was another stroke back with Gina Kim (67). Chisato Iwai — the winner in Mexico at Mayakoba in May — was in the group at 11 under after a 66. She also eagled the fifth hole. Haeran Ryu, at No. 9 in the world one of only two top-10 players in the field, also was 11 under. She had a hole-in-one on the 177-yard 16th in a 67. Akie Iwai dropped a stroke on the par-3 second, then played a five-hole stretch in 5 under. She hit her second shot to 3 feet to set up the eagle, then hit to a foot on the par-4 sixth. On the back nine, she birdied three of the first four holes, two of them par 5s, then hit a 152-yard shot to a foot on 18. She's sticking with the aggressive approach Sunday. 'No change. No change. Same as usual,' she said. Two-time champion Brooke Henderson, a stroke back after an opening 65, followed a second-round 73 with a 68 to get to 10 under. The Canadian star is winless since January 2023. Second-round leader Jeongeun Lee5 also was 10 under. She shot 74. Amateur Kiara Romero was 8 under after a 72. The University of Oregon player won the 2023 U.S. Girls' Junior and 2025 Big Ten title. The tournament is the longest continuous event on the LPGA Tour except for the majors, dating to 1972.
Yahoo
16 hours ago
- Yahoo
Canadian women capture bronze at America's Cup wheelchair basketball tournament
The Canadian women's wheelchair basketball team earned a bronze medal in the America's Cup tournament on Thursday night, beating Argentina 63-51 in Bogotá, Colombia. Arinn Young led the way for Team Canada, scoring a game-high 26 points, and added 16 rebounds and four assists. Élodie Tessier added in 11 points, nine rebounds and seven assists, while Elise Froese provided a spark off the bench with eight points and six rebounds. Young, who averaged 28.7 points, 11.2 rebounds, and 6.3 assists over six games, was named a tournament all-star during Thursday's medal ceremony. "I think during our pool, when we played Brazil, it was a tough game – they showed us what competing is like, especially for our younger athletes," said Canada's Puisand Lai, who had six points, three assists and three rebounds in the win. "I think as the tournament went on, we kept building, and as we went into the last game, we knew we had it, we came out with fire. "It was tough, but we gave everything we had and we grinded through. I'm happy that we came away with this medal." The Americas Cup is a qualification tournament for the wheelchair basketball world championships, which will take place in Ottawa from Sept. 9–19, 2026. The U.S. and Brazil earned spots for Ottawa, and Argentina, along with Colombia, advanced to the Repechage Tournament with their respective finishes in Bogotá. As the host nation, Canada has already qualified for the world championships.